Difference between revisions of "The Pendragon Journals"

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''"Not sure how it stayed in there. We know the Rinoins were wiped out during a war. It seems if you had a bomb shelter, you'd use it. So whatever stuff was in there was stacked inside when there was no need for shelter - but it was built back when there was. Quite about about their history we don't know. Still, somehow, this little room got packed full of junk, sealed, and forgotten about for more than ten thousand years."''
 
''"Not sure how it stayed in there. We know the Rinoins were wiped out during a war. It seems if you had a bomb shelter, you'd use it. So whatever stuff was in there was stacked inside when there was no need for shelter - but it was built back when there was. Quite about about their history we don't know. Still, somehow, this little room got packed full of junk, sealed, and forgotten about for more than ten thousand years."''
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==Journals==
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Among the belongings, Hunter discovered a collection of several dozen spiral-bound notebooks of the type students use for assignments in school. Very simple in design, unadorned, each filled with seventy to a hundred sheets of blue lines notebook paper. In this case, someone had used the books as a journal, which covered around seven years of their life.
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The journals were not dated or signed, but Hunter maintains that they are the work of none other than [[Nathan Searlin]].
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Hunter said:
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''"Even just archaologically, these are beautiful. The writer is only about 5 when the first journal begins. He can barely write, and fills every page with two-line high, large block letters. He doesn't have anything to say and just talked about a need to write. He talks about his day, normal childhood experiences. Petting a cat, going to sporting event. After a few years he starts to talk more about his feelings, his compulsions, how alone he is."''
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''"The prose style is completely unmistakable. The wording, the sentence structure, it's all there. His writing improved by the time his authentic journals were recorded, but there are many very less-than-subtle nuances."''
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The journals found had no name on them. The entries were un-signed, and most were un-dated. This is consistent with Nathan's known writtings; his journals were less a record than a personal act of expression. He was writting to get the thoughts out of his head.

Revision as of 21:49, 27 July 2016

Called The Pendragon Journals for their discoverer, Pendragon Hunter Jusenkyou, the series of spiral-bound notebooks were discovered in the Rinoin city of Nine Pounds. According to Hunter Jusenkyou, they indicate that Rinoin civilization is much older than originally believed, possibly dating back to late Classic Antiquity.

Discovery

Archaeology was a hobby for Hunter, who frequently went on digs or arranged to visit them when taking vacations. For the fine, he had chosen the site based on what was understood about the layout of the city and subtle topographical clues from the surrounding region. As Hunter explained:

"When the Marcons paved over the place, they buried it. But if you grew up in them, you can spot suburbs." True to form, his team uncovered an out suburb of Nine Pounds, including several homes and numerous well-preserved artifacts. There was little left of most houses, any metal or wooden materials were long gone. But they found many factory-made ceramic items and other materials, including evidence of consumer-grade electronics."

Hunter said: "If I took you into one of these houses today and sat you down in front of the TV, you'd have no idea. Your only clues would be that the magazines on the coffee table were in a different language, and the TV... otherwise, everything would feel so normal. You could walk down the street and it's just like any suburb anywhere."

The major find happened in the yard behind one of the homes. The topography of the area and clay unwittingly dumped during the burial had kept this particular vault dry, while similar such constructs found near other hopes were rotted through.

Hunter said: "The belongs were not much. Old books, clothes, small appliances, the kinds of things we all have in our garages and attics. Useless junk you can't bring yourself to throw out. Of no value to the owners, but a glorious treasure-trove for us. I think it was just stuff, maybe a new owner bought the house, maybe they were storing things for a friend. There seemed to be items from two or three different families collected over a few decades. Impossible to say if it all went in the hole at once or just built up over time."

"Not sure how it stayed in there. We know the Rinoins were wiped out during a war. It seems if you had a bomb shelter, you'd use it. So whatever stuff was in there was stacked inside when there was no need for shelter - but it was built back when there was. Quite about about their history we don't know. Still, somehow, this little room got packed full of junk, sealed, and forgotten about for more than ten thousand years."

Journals

Among the belongings, Hunter discovered a collection of several dozen spiral-bound notebooks of the type students use for assignments in school. Very simple in design, unadorned, each filled with seventy to a hundred sheets of blue lines notebook paper. In this case, someone had used the books as a journal, which covered around seven years of their life.

The journals were not dated or signed, but Hunter maintains that they are the work of none other than Nathan Searlin.

Hunter said:

"Even just archaologically, these are beautiful. The writer is only about 5 when the first journal begins. He can barely write, and fills every page with two-line high, large block letters. He doesn't have anything to say and just talked about a need to write. He talks about his day, normal childhood experiences. Petting a cat, going to sporting event. After a few years he starts to talk more about his feelings, his compulsions, how alone he is."

"The prose style is completely unmistakable. The wording, the sentence structure, it's all there. His writing improved by the time his authentic journals were recorded, but there are many very less-than-subtle nuances."

The journals found had no name on them. The entries were un-signed, and most were un-dated. This is consistent with Nathan's known writtings; his journals were less a record than a personal act of expression. He was writting to get the thoughts out of his head.